Opinion
The Bond and Undertaking Law (Code Civ. Proc., § 995.010 et seq.) 1 provides that a governmental entity cannot be required to provide an undertaking in order to obtain a temporary restraining order *919 (TRO), We hold that the public policy supporting this exemption is sufficiently strong to override a trial court’s inherent power to require an undertaking as a condition of issuing that form of interim injunctive relief. In light of this holding, we conclude that no recovery can be had from the undertaking which the trial court had no authority to require.
Background
At the start of September of 1990 Cypress Lawn Cemetery Association was about to commence construction of a mausoleum on property situated in the Town of Colma but adjoining the City of South San Francisco (SSF). Alleging that construction and operation of the mausoleum could entail adverse environmental consequences, SSF filed a complaint for various forms of injunctive relief against Colma and Cypress Lawn.
SSF’s concurrent application for immediate relief in the form of a TRO was the subject of a contested hearing at which counsel for Cypress Lawn argued that “if Your Honor were to consider issuing a TRO, ... we would request that there be a bond posted. ... I don’t know what kind of damages might be incurred by a delay, but they could be substantial.” In response to an inquiry from the court on the issue of a possible bond, “assuming the restraining order is granted,” counsel for SSF stated: “We would hope that we would get it without a bond if it were granted, but we would be willing to provide a bond if that were a requirement of the court.”
After the court announced that it would order issuance of the TRO, counsel for Cypress Lawn again requested “that you consider requiring the City to post a bond” in the amount of $70,000 (i.e., approximately 10 percent of the estimated construction costs). The court stated that “I find the suggestion that the City post a bond acceptable and would make such an order and I would find acceptable that suggestion that [the] bond be ten percent.” The court then signed an “Order To Show Cause And Temporary Restraining Order” which (1) recited that SSF had filed “a written undertaking .. . conforming to the applicable provisions of the California Code of Civil Procedure” (2) set a hearing date for defendants to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue as prayed, and (3) restrained Cypress Lawn pending that hearing from performing any further work on the project. An undertaking for $70,000 was then posted on behalf of SSF by United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USFG).
This was the high-water mark of the litigation from SSF’s standpoint. Ten days later it voluntarily dismissed the Town of Colma as a party. TWo weeks later the trial court dissolved the TRO and denied SSF’s application for a *920 preliminary injunction. Three days later the litigation concluded when SSF voluntarily dismissed its complaint against Cypress Lawn.
More than nine months later Cypress Lawn noticed a “Motion To Enforce Liability Under Bond” in the amount of approximately $56,000 for construction delay damages and attorney fees allegedly incurred as a result of the litigation and the TRO. SSF responded with an “Application For Order Releasing Surety” on behalf of itself and USFG, asking ‘to be released from liability on the bond filed in this action ... on the ground that the judge who ordered the filing of the bond acted without authority since no bond could be required of a city by virtue of . . . Sections 529(b)(4) and 995.220.”
After conducting a hearing on the competing motions, the court denied that of SSF and USFG, and granted that of Cypress Lawn. The court then signed and entered a “Judgment Of Liability On Bond” in the amount requested by Cypress Lawn. A timely notice of appeal was filed jointly by SSF and USFG.
Review
A preliminary injunction ordinarily cannot take effect unless and until the party applying for it provides “an undertaking ... to the effect that the applicant will pay to the party enjoined such damages ... as the party may sustain by reason of the injunction, if the court finally decides that the applicant was not entitled to the injunction.” (§ 529, subd. (a).) Notwithstanding that it is “a restraint of the same nature as an injunction”
(San Diego W. Co.
v.
Steamship Co.
(1894)
The same statute expressing the general requirement of an undertaking for a preliminary injunction, also enumerates categories of exempted parties, among which is “[a] public entity . . . described in Section 995.220.” (§ 529, subd. (b)(4).) Section 995.220 is part of the Bond and Undertaking Law, the provisions of which “apply to a bond or undertaking . . . given as security pursuant to any statute of this state, except to the extent the statute prescribes a different rule or is inconsistent.” (§ 995.020, subd. (a).) Section *921 995.220 provides in pertinent part: “Notwithstanding any other statute, if a statute provides for a bond[ 2 ] in an action or proceeding, including but not limited to a bond for issuance of a restraining order or injunction, appointment of a receiver, or stay of enforcement of a judgment on appeal, the following public entities [including a city] are not required to give the bond and shall have the same rights, remedies, and benefits as if the bond were given.”
The general statutes governing issuance of injunctions and TRO’s (§§ 525-534) share common ground with the Bond and Undertaking Law on the subject of posted securities. As there is no facial conflict or overt inconsistency between these two groups of statutes, the provisions of the Bond and Undertaking Law control. (§ 995.020.)
When section 995.020 speaks to “a bond or undertaking . . . given as security
pursuant to
any statute of this state” (italics added), the italicized language is to be construed as extending the ambit of the Bond and Undertaking Law to any undertaking “given as security in conformity with any statute of this state.”
3
(See
Samarkand of Santa Barbara, Inc.
v.
County of Santa Barbara
(1963)
For present purposes, the net import of sections 995.020 and 995.220 are twofold. First, governmental entities are granted an exemption from the undertaking requirement ordinarily imposed upon private parties. Second, *922 the Bond and Undertaking Law does not limit this exemption to situations where an undertaking is required by a statute.
As previously mentioned, the purpose of requiring security is to afford compensation to the party wrongly enjoined or restrained. (See § 529, subd. (a);
Associates Capital Services Corp.
v.
Security Pac. Nat. Bank
(1979)
The real issue presented here is the strength of this public policy.
Cypress Lawn defends the judgment by arguing that it allows recovery against an undertaking required by the trial court in the exercise of its inherent equitable powers; therefore, in that the undertaking posted had no reference to any statutory requirement, it stands outside the reach of the Bond and Undertaking Law. In short, Cypress Lawn is contending that the trial court was simply adopting an unorthodox means of implementing the Supreme Court’s suggestion that “the better practice would be to require an undertaking” when issuing a TRO
(Biasca
v.
Superior Court, supra,
It has already been demonstrated that the scope of the Bond and Undertaking Law is greater than its literal language, reaching securities furnished in conformity with its provisions.
A trial court possesses inherent power to issue a TRO
(County of Inyo
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1976)
The concept of “public policy” is inherently imprecise.
(Safeway Stores
v.
Retail Clerks etc. Assn.
(1953)
It is true that “equitable estoppel may be applied against the government where justice and right require it”
(Driscoll
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1967)
The situation of Cypress Lawn is exceptional for its novelty, but not for its exemplary injustice. The public policy of California clearly
*924
tolerates governmental entities escaping liability in the identical situation where parties erroneously enjoined at the behest of other private parties can obtain compensation. But at the hands of officialdom private parties can suffer injury or detriment which cannot constitute legally compensable damages. (See
Wallace
v.
Miller, supra,
Although it was certainly unfortunate that SSF did not raise the matter of its exemption until after the undertaking had been posted, this circumstance is not consequential.
6
Section 995.220 gave SSF the privilege against being required to post an undertaking. Enacted for the public good, its benefits cannot lightly be deemed surrendered by an official’s errors or omissions. Then too, by incurring the cost of an undertaking it could not be required to provide, a governmental entity would be committing waste—i.e., “ ‘improvident and completely unnecessary public spending’ ”
(Sundance
v.
Municipal Court
(1986)
Finally, Cypress Lawn appears to argue that even if the undertaking cannot be deemed provided pursuant to statute, it is nevertheless good as a
*925
common law undertaking, and Cypress Lawn is its third party beneficiary. The undertaking was given to secure a statutory privilege. This was contrary to the public policy that SSF should enjoy that privilege without the burden of an undertaking. The undertaking was therefore void, and could not be valid as a common law undertaking. (See e.g.,
Powers
v.
Chabot
(1892)
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to make appropriate orders (1) granting the “Application for Order Releasing Surety” filed by SSF and USFG, and (2) denying the “Motion To Enforce Liability Under Bond” filed by Cypress Lawn. The parties shall bear their respective costs of appeal.
Perley, J., and Reardon, J., concurred.
Notes
Statutory references are to this code unless otherwise indicated.
The Bond and Undertaking Law treats the two forms of security as pretty much synonymous. (See §§ 995.140, 995.210; Cal. Law Revision Com. corns., West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc., §§ 995.190, 995.210 (1992 pocket supp.) pp. 38-39.)
The TRO expressly recites that SSF had filed “a written undertaking . . . conforming to the applicable provisions of the California Code of Civil Procedure.”
At the time it was repealed in the same year the Bond and Undertaking Law was enacted (Stats. 1982, ch. 517, § 175, p. 2361), former section 1058 provided in pertinent part: “In any civil action or proceeding wherein . . . any . . . city . . . is a party plaintiff or defendant, no bond, written undertaking, or security can be required of the . . . city . . . .”
Here, the premium charged SSF for the undertaking was $1,400 per year.
Nevertheless, we are not insensitive to the expenses incurred by Cypress Lawn which SSF could have obviated had it raised the exemption issue at an earlier stage of the proceedings. Not wishing to aggravate this situation further, we have determined that the interests of justice shall be best served by not awarding SSF its costs on this appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 26(a).)
In support of these claims Cypress Lawn relies upon statements made at the time the TRO application, which, Cypress Lawn submits, establish that SSF was in effect inducing the alleged error of which it now complains by volunteering to post an undertaking. A more reasonable reading of the record is that SSF merely acceded to the trial court’s requirement of an undertaking, a requirement which clearly came at the instigation of Cypress Lawn.
